Medical Ethics: Approved Cases for the final paper
Table of Contents
Notes: this contains the pre-approved cases for you to discuss in your papers. As term develops, you will also receive new forum cases. These are also permissible topics, even if they are not presently in this document. If you wish to do a case that is neither in this document, nor from the forum, you should contact me about it for approval. Note the cases are categorized by the basic kind of issue they raise. The tles also suggest topics or provide a synopsis of the issue. Also note that I have provided comments or guided the topic in some of the cases; be sure to pay aenon to these notes. Finally, remember you do not need to provide citaons for case details obtained from this packet. For any details you found in other sources, you would need to provide citaons.
You should be able to jump to a topic in the table of contents by holding Ctrl and le kicking on the tle.
Contents
Autonomy
1.) The Dax Case: should Dax Cowart’s treatments have been ceased?
2.) To Dialyze or not to dialyze
3.) Disagreement over treang a 16 year old with Hodgkin’s lymphoma
4.) A difficult case for respect for autonomy (RL from week 4 on the forum)
Miscellaneous
1. Paent’s family in the trauma bay (week 3 forum prompt): should the aending physician let the paent’s wife in?
Confidenality
1.) What should a PT do when she thinks her paent is lying to her physician?
2.) Should a nurse tell other health-care professionals about a paent’s suicide aempt which the paent told the nurse of in confidenality?
Case Overview:
3.) Should a hospital worker whose grandfather was admied overnight look at his grandfather’s records?
Case Overview:
Beginning and End of Life Ethics
1.) The case of Briany Maynard
2.) An 83 year old man requests that a doctor stop his pacemaker; should the doctor do so?
Case Overview:
3.) The case of Helga Wanglie: should paents and/or family be able to demand treatment their doctor believes to be fule?
Case Overview:
4.) Aboron because of Down’s Syndrome
Case Overview:
Health Care and Jusce
1.) How should we raon vaccines?
Case Overview:
2.) Are religious exempons for contracepve treatments jusfiable?
Case Overview:
3.) Do paents have a right to alternave medicine (here acupuncture)?
Case Overview:
Autonomy
1.) The Dax Case: should Dax Cowart’s treatments have been ceased?
Case overview: hps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSsu6HkguV8
2.) To Dialyze or not to dialyze
Case overview: a comatose 64 year-old man was brought to the Emergency Room by ambulance. Someone who remained unidenfied had called “911” only to say that he needed immediate dialysis. There was no family with him, and the paent’s records were retrieved from a nearby hospital. His history included Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus for many years with mulple complicaons: end stage renal failure (Stage 5 Chronic Kidney Disease), hemodialysis dependence, bilateral above knee amputaons (AKA), a previous cardiac arrest with post-resuscitaon cerebral anoxia, mulple prior strokes, and heart disease with many admissions for heart failure. He had not dialyzed for nearly one month, and the dialysis unit was also contacted regarding his previous treatments at their facility. Apparently, his course had been complicated by his verbally and physically abusive behavior towards other paents, their families, as well as dialysis center staff. Although he was not disrupve in other environments, when he arrived at the dialysis unit he exhibited mulple dysfunconal and potenally dangerous behaviors. He struck and insulted people in the waing room, he spit at nurses and dialysis technicians while on the machine, and he pulled out his needles when he was unaended. Occasionally, the bleeding from this acvity was substanal and startled other paents. The unit decided to discharge him from their care and to disconnue dialysis.
Aer Emergency Department evaluaon, he was admied to the hospital with a crically elevated potassium level. He was dialyzed emergently one me, and his family was contacted by the primary care team and nephrologist for a conference. His divorced wife and a 28 year-old daughter comprised the paent’s enre family, and neither had obtained legal decision making authority through durable power of aorney. As the paent was not competent to make his own decisions regarding his dialysis and other essenal care, they were queried as to what statements, if any, the paent had made in the past regarding future medical care. They insisted that he be chronically dialyzed despite the preceding history of abusive behavior. They said that “when he wakes up, he says that he wants to dialyze.” He was temporarily dialyzed three mes a week, and an Ethics Consultaon was obtained to assist in decision-making.
A review of the past medical history noted that about one year ago, when the paent suffered a heart aack, he also had post-resuscitaon anoxic brain injury. Prior to the episode, he did have bizarre behaviors that were primarily self-directed. (He deliberately slammed his below-the-knee amputaons into the floor to the extent the bleeding necessitated that AKA be done.) Someme aer the brain injury, he began to exhibit the more violent behaviors that were threatening, dangerous, and abusive to others.
An ethics consultant was brought in. The Ethics consultants faced a number of challenges. Since the paent could not communicate, were his former wife and his daughter appropriate surrogates? Were they acng in the paent’s best interests or were they movated by other dynamics in their efforts to connue his dialysis? Was his behavior in the previous dialysis unit appropriately documented and determined to be irreversible? Were there elements of delirium, or had the strokes and anoxic brain injuries made his behavior permanent? Should he be sedated in order to connue chronic dialysis? If not, was disconnuaon of dialysis an ethical opon?
The consultants decided to obtain the relevant informaon regarding the paent and his behavior from three sources prior to rendering their opinion: 1) the dialysis unit staff that cared for him during the preceding year, 2) the nurses and staff who cared for him during the present admission, and 3) his family. The family gave permission to review his dialysis unit records. They only cauoned the ethics consultants that one nephrologist at the unit made the decision to stop dialysis because he was frustrated with the family’s behavior and that he had been rude to them.
The staff members at the unit were consistent in describing the paent’s abusive behavior. Whereas it had begun prior to his cardiac arrest, they agreed that it worsened aerwards. The behavior did not seem to “wax and wane,” but was persistent and potenally dangerous to the paent, other paents, and the health care team. In contrast to the family’s contenon, four rounding nephrologists were involved in the decision to disconnue his dialysis, not merely the one who may have been biased according to the inial family meeng. One nephrologist admied that he could only sedate the paent on high dose, parenteral anpsychoc medicaons and he felt that this opon was untenable for a prolonged period of me. Prior to disconnuing the paent’s dialysis, the unit staff and administraon held a meeng with the family. They apprised the former wife and daughter that, if a family member sat with the paent on dialysis and helped to relax him, they would try to connue his treatments. However, the family connued to “drop him off” at the unit and leave. The unit documented the meengs in wring and officially disconnued the paent’s access to dialysis at their unit. Some staff members alleged that the family profited from the paent’s “Social Security” income and therefore desired to have dialysis connued.
The dialysis nurses who had treated the paent at the hospital aer his recent admission were asked about his behavior. Even though he dialyzed enough (four mes regularly) to reach a comfortable baseline, he was verbally and physically abusive, and he tried to pull out his needles unless he was restrained and heavily sedated. The behavior had only become worse aer he “woke up” aer 1 month without dialysis. No one had been able to hold a meaningful conversaon with him regarding his medical treatment plan.
Aer obtaining this background informaon, the consultants met with the family and recommended no further dialysis. The consultants, primary care team, nephrologists, and nursing staff of the hospital unit unanimously agreed with that decision. The family disagreed with the decision and requested another aempt with sedaon, however they were diplomacally refused.
3.) Disagreement over treang a 16 year old with Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Case overview: A 16 year old Hodgkin lymphoma paent refuses to have his blood specimen drawn, thus canceling his scheduled oncologic treatment. As a 16 year old, he has no legal standing as an adult. His parents are split over his decision. One supports his right to choose; the other wishes the specimen to be drawn and the chemotherapy reinstated. The treang physician is in favor of having the blood sample drawn against the child’s wishes.
If you write on this case, do not limit yourself to considering the child’s legal status. This is a course on medical ethics, not medical law. It is coherent that our current laws are unjust, and that sixteen year old children’s parents should have less legal authority than they current do. So, this case is here parally to get you to think more about what (legal) medical rights children ought to have, not simply which legal rights they do have.
4.) A difficult case for respect for autonomy (RL from week 4 on the forum)
Case overview: at 80, R.L. lives with his wife in a rerement community. He has always valued his independence, but recently he has been having trouble caring for himself. He is having difficulty walking and managing his medicaons for diabetes, heart disease, and kidney problems.
His doctor diagnoses depression aer nong that R.L. has lost interest in the things he used to enjoy. Lethargic and sleepless, R.L. has difficulty maintaining his weight and talks about killing himself with a loaded handgun. He agrees to try medicaon for the mood disorder.
Two weeks later, before the effect of the medicine can be seen, R.L. is hospitalized for a heart aack. The heart is damaged so severely it can’t pump enough blood to keep the kidneys working.
Renal dialysis is necessary to keep R.L. alive, at least unl it’s clear whether the heart and kidneys will recover. This involves moving him three mes a week to the dialysis unit, where needles are inserted into a large artery and a vein to connect him to a machine for three to four hours.
Aer the second treatment, R.L. demands that dialysis be stopped and asks to be allowed to die.
Some Addional Reflecons:
R.L.’s was an actual case that presented his physicians with a common dilemma in treang paents with serious illnesses: Had depression rendered him incapable of making a legimate life-and-death decision?
When paents agree to undergo or refuse medical treatment, they are supposed to reach the decision by a process called informed consent. The doctor discloses informaon about the medical condion, treatment opons, possible complicaons, and expected outcomes with or without treatment.
To give informed consent or refusal, the paent must be acng voluntarily and must have the capacity to make the decision. That means the paent must be able to understand the informaon, appreciate its personal implicaons, weigh the opons based on personal values and life goals, and communicate a decision. From an ethical point of view, informed consent is based on the philosophical principles of autonomy and beneficence. In R.L.’s case, these two principles are in conflict. First, R.L.’s prognosis is unclear, and the physician does not know if the benefits of dialysis will outweigh the burdens. Under normal circumstances, this decision would be made by R.L., but the physician suspects the paent’s capacity for autonomous decision making is impaired by depression.
Depression is a mood disorder that can profoundly affect a person’s ability to think posively, experience pleasure, or imagine a brighter future. Depressed people frequently have lile energy, poor appetes, and disturbed sleep. They may have difficulty concentrang, or they may be troubled by feelings of guilt and hopelessness. Preoccupaon with death is common and, in some cases, may include contemplang suicide.
Because R.L. was suicidal before his heart aack, no one was sure whether his refusal of dialysis represented an authenc exercise of his right to stop lifesaving treatment or a convenient means to passively end his life. On the other hand, if the doctor connued dialysis, he would be denying R.L. the same right to refuse treatment that another paent who was not depressed would have.
When paents ask to have life-sustaining treatment withheld, doctors have been taught to consider whether depression is driving the request, because the condion lis in two-thirds of those who are treated with an-depressant medicaons. The presumpon is that once the problem has cleared, the paent will look at treatment decisions differently.
Recent research has challenged that presumpon by showing depressed paents don’t necessarily choose to hasten death in the first place and they oen make the same decisions aer they recover from depression.
Thus, depressed paents may be able to give informed consent, but doctors and loved ones must consider whether the decision to refuse medical treatment is logical, internally consistent, and conforms with past life choices and values.
In R.L.’s case, the doctor, in consultaon with a psychiatrist, decided to connue the course of an depressant medicaon to see if, when it began to take effect, R.L. would change his mind about treatment. In the meanme, his dialysis was connued.
Aer five weeks, R.L. showed no improvement, and he began to refuse medicaons and food. If R.L. was to be kept alive, he would need to be given a feeding tube. Legally, this might be defensible insofar as there is a plausible case for R.L’s not being competent (though remember the worry, menoned previously, that we shouldn’t hasten to conclude depression necessarily prevents people from acng on their deeper values). In such a case, the decision would be his wife’s. But, ethically, the issues may not be so clear.
Miscellaneous
1. Paent’s family in the trauma bay (week 3 forum prompt): should the aending physician let the paent’s wife in?
Case Overview: A 28-year-old man is involved in a motor vehicle collision on a country road in rural North Carolina. He was driving a large SUV and restrained by a seatbelt. According to witnesses, the driver appeared to lose control of the vehicle while driving over an icy overpass. At inial assessment by emergency medical service (EMS) professionals, the paent was obtunded and hypotensive, for which he was emergently intubated; his passenger was pronounced dead at the scene. Shortly aer intubaon, the paent suffered a cardiac arrest. EMS performed eight minutes of cardiopulmonary resuscitaon before his spontaneous return of circulaon. The paent was brought via helicopter to a level I trauma center.
In the trauma bay, the team performs a primary survey (a specific, targeted exam done in the trauma bay to idenfy life-threatening injuries) during which the paent requires bilateral thoracotomy tube inseron and central line placement. Aer placement of the le chest tube, a liter of blood immediately drains into the device’s collecon chamber. Aer further examinaon, the team finds evidence of severe chest trauma: wide chest wall ecchymosis (severe bruising), subcutaneous crepitus (air under the skin suggesng traumac injury to the lung), and extensive bilateral rib fractures. Extended focused assessment of sonography in trauma (FAST) exam (a quick abdominal ultrasound to idenfy intra-abdominal hemorrhage aer traumac injury) reveals no intra-abdominal fluid collecons; however, the paent has what appears to be blood in the pericardial sac and a large undrained hemothorax (collecon of blood) in the le chest. A massive transfusion protocol is iniated to try to compensate for his blood loss. Nevertheless, he remains hypotensive and tachycardic. The trauma team plans for exploratory thoracotomy to idenfy and treat a suspected intrathoracic injury. As the trauma team begins coordinang with members of the operang room staff, the on-call chaplain approaches the senior aending physician with a request. The paent’s wife, who has just arrived at the hospital, has asked for permission to come to the trauma bay to see her husband prior to surgery.
The aending physician looks at her paent and at members of the trauma team engaged in a flurry of movement as they prepare the paent for immediate transport to the operang room. With tubes protruding from the paent at nearly every orifice and a pool of blood expanding beneath his stretcher, the aending physician observes a scene that could be traumazing to even a seasoned clinician and wonders how to respond to the chaplain.
Confidenality
1.) What should a PT do when she thinks her paent is lying to her physician?
Case Overview: aer suffering a back injury at work, Lowell Baxter has completed three weeks of physical therapy. While unable to work, Lowell has been going three mes per week to see therapist Eve Nye who has been working for three months at a new clinic and is sll learning the ropes.
Aer Mr. Baxter’s ninth treatment, his physician, Dr. Felton Cranz, explained that he had made good progress. Lowell no longer needed PT but was unable to return to his physically demanding job. He connued the home exercise regimen that Ms. Nye had given him. Dr. Cranz, who was not adverse to ordering addional physical therapy if necessary, told Lowell to call him if he had any further problems.
One month later, Mr. Baxter called Dr. Cranz’s office and told the nurse that there had been “a flare up” in his lower back. Aer talking with the doctor, the nurse called Lowell and told him that Dr. Cranz ordered another round of PT -3 mes per week for 3 weeks -that he should begin right away.
During his third session, while telling Eve about his recent acvies, Lowell menoned that he slipped and fell on a rainy night while coaching his daughter’s soccer team. He said that this happened “a couple of days” before the “flare up”. Eve asked if he told his doctor about this latest fall. Surprised at the queson, Lowell replied, “Well, no. Why would I? Anyway, I was having some painful twinges in my back before I slipped. Besides I fell on the so grass. I’m sure I didn’t hurt myself when I slipped. Dr. Cranz is always so busy and I don’t need to waste his me with this. He told me aer I finished my sessions a month ago that I might need another round of PT anyway. I feel beer aer our therapy sessions ….So, how about those Sharks -the men in teal?”
When Ms. Nye saw Mr. Baxter on his fih visit, he complained of increased pain with radiaon down his le leg. During her evaluaon, Eve concluded that his pain was different from the pain he experienced aer the first fall and was almost ceranly related to the second fall. She explained this to Lowell and suggested to him that he talk to his doctor to ensure that he received the appropriate treatment. Lowell insisted that he did want to bother his doctor with this.
Now, on his seventh visit, Mr. Baxter is visibly fagued and short-tempered. He complains of weakness and numbness in the le leg. Eve strongly encourages him to talk with Dr. Cranz. He adamantly refuses.
“Well, perhaps I should talk with Dr. Cranz for you. I could tell him about your fall at the soccer game and this onset of numbness and weakness in your leg. You know, Dr. Cranz looks at the notes I write.”
“No,” blurts Mr. Baxter. “I don’t want you to say anything. It’s none of your business! This is my injury, and I don’t want to bother him with this. You have to respect my wishes. Your job is to do therapy; not to interfere. Now, let’s get on with it!”
2.) Should a nurse tell other health-care professionals about a paent’s suicide aempt which the paent told the nurse of in confidenality?
Case Overview: the paent Mr Green is a 57 year old gentleman with aggressive prostate cancer who is took care of by the nursing team in the oncology department of a general hospital in Brisbane, QLD, Australia. Mr Green was diagnosed with prostate cancer seven years ago but refused medical and surgical treatment at the me. He chose to seek alternave treatment and did not follow up with the urologist over that seven year period. Mr Green has now presented with anemia and hypoproteinemia. Aer several diagnosc tests over a period it was discovered that the cancer had metastasized to his bones, it had spread locally to his lymph nodes and the primary tumor was invading the bladder and parally obstrucng the le kidney. Mr Green had several admissions over a two month period for various reasons. On the last admission Mr Green was told that he may only have 4–6 weeks (previously it was 6–12 months) to live aer a cystoscopy showed further extensive growth of the tumor, it was determined that any further surgical/medical intervenon would not be appropriate in this case and that a palliave care regimen was the next step. At this point the paent reported to the health care team that he had resigned himself to the fact that he was going to die. Mr Green pulled one of the author’s colleagues aside and confided to the nurse that he planned to kill himself and that is was a secret that the nurse was not to tell anyone.
The major ethical queson of this case can be idenfied as if the nursing staff should tell other health care team members about paent’s suicide aempt without paent’s consent.
3.) Adolescent confidenality surrounding aboron decisions.
Case Overview: some Fridays are more memorable than others. This one started with a pile of phone messages, and my nurse said that the one on top was urgent. The paent—age seventeen—said she had to come in immediately and talk: “I’m desperate. And please do not let my mom know. I might be pregnant, I need your help.” The paent’s mother had also called. I requested that the nurse make arrangements without nofying the mother, as I would call later.
The paent arrived during my lunch hour, since it was the only me available, and was franc, as she was certain that she was pregnant. Her menstrual period was late, and, indeed, urine tesng confirmed her pregnancy. Based on the ming of her last period she was about eleven or twelve weeks along. The paent said that her mom would pressure her to get an aboron. We talked for a long me about what she wanted, if the father of the child was to be involved, and the challenges to be faced. I also informed the paent that her mother was already aware of something as she had also called to talk to me. I asked how she would like me to handle things with her mother since I would need to return her phone call from earlier in the day. The paent already knew that her mother was suspicious and recognized that the discussion was both necessary and appropriate. The paent was willing to see a counselor and an obstetrician on the following Monday for confirmaon of dates via ultrasound. She wanted me to help her speak with her mother and said that I could invite her to come in Monday for a joint discussion. The paent thought leng things sele over the weekend was the best course of acon. The immediate next step was for me to tell her mother that we would all talk the following week and that her daughter was medically fine and geng all the care she needed.
Things seemed to have the potenal to move forward, and just as I was about to take a quiet moment at the end of the day to call the teenager’s mother, the assistant medical director for our mul-specialty clinic stormed into my office. He irately informed me that there had been a severe paent complaint that he needed to address with me immediately. Apparently, a paent of mine was being denied access to care in violaon of her reproducve rights, and what did I think I was doing? A mother who had called about her daughter was livid because she was certain her daughter was almost at the twelve-week limit when an aboron could be done locally and with less risk to her daughter. She said that she had informed the director “that the treang physician was making things worse.” Somewhat shaken, I asked the name of the paent, and, sure enough, it was the adolescent female with whom I had spoken this morning. I informed my medical director that I had seen the paent, that she was pregnant, and that she had told me she wanted to keep the baby. When he heard about the proposed plan of acon, he felt less concerned about the issue of “denial of access to care” and—given the full picture—did not have risk management concerns at this me.
Beginning and End of Life Ethics
1.) The case of Briany Maynard
Case Overview: hp://www.cnn.com/2014/10/07/opinion/maynard-assisted-suicide-cancer-dignity/index.html
2.) An 83 year old man requests that a doctor stop his pacemaker; should the doctor do so?
Case Overview: Mr. Perry (not his real name) was 83 years old and had several medical problems. He had spent the past several months in and out of hospitals and rehab. Prior to that, he lived independently in a small Midwestern town. Widowed many years ago, he subsequently enjoyed the company of a lovely lady friend who lived down the street from the Perry home. He had five adult children and numerous grandchildren.
Life should have been relavely good for this octogenarian. But life was not good. Not anymore. “My body is all worn out. I’m worn out. Don’t want to do this anymore, Doc. They say I can’t go home and be safe. And I’m NOT going to a nursing home. No way! Just stop that lile gadget that shocks me and the part that keeps my heart going. I want them stopped. Yes, the pacemaker, too. A magnet will stop it, right? Just do it. Please.”
Mr. Perry had a cardiac resynchronizaon therapy defibrillator (CRT-D) implanted a few years ago. It included an electrical pacing component for heart rhythms, on which the paent was 100% dependent. The defibrillator had shocked him, more than once, just before he came to the hospital E.R. with this request. That was the last straw for Mr. Perry. No more shocks for him. No nursing home or rehab or hospitalizaons or medicaons. And no more mechanical pacing either. “I’m red of fighng.”
Deacvang an internal defibrillator is one thing. The paent’s cardiologist didn’t need an ethics consultaon for that decision. “If he doesn’t want to be shocked again, that’s his decision. And if it went off again aer he’d requested it stopped, that could be a kind of torture,” she reasoned. Deacvaon happened quickly aer admission from the Emergency Department. A “Do Not Aempt Resuscitaon” order was placed in the chart.
But the pacemaker, also? He wanted it stopped. Ought we do so? Would that be ethically respecul of this paent’s autonomy? Or would it be physician-technician assisted suicide?
3.) The case of Helga Wanglie: should paents and/or family be able to demand treatment their doctor believes to be fule?
Case Overview: on December 14, 1989, Helga Wanglie, 86, fell in her Minneapolis home and broke her hip. Aer the fracture was successfully set at Hennepin County medical Center (HCMC), she was discharged to a nursing home. She was readmied to HCMC on January 1, 1990, when she developed respiratory failure and was placed on a respirator. During the next five months repeated aempts to wean Mrs. Wanglie from the respirator were unsuccessful; she was conscious, aware of her surroundings, and could recognize her family.
On May 7, 1990, she was transferred to another facility that specializes in the care of respiratordependent paents. While there and sll unable to be weaned from the respirator, she experienced a cardiopulmonary arrest and was taken to another acute care hospital in St. Paul. Diagnosis now showed severe and irreversible brain damage. The hospital ethics commiee discussed with the family the possibility of liming further life-sustaining treatment because of her dismal prognosis. The family resisted the idea and requested that Mrs. Wanglie be transferred back to HCMC where they felt she had received excellent care.
The family thought the suggeson of withdrawal of life-sustaining technologies reflected moral decay in our culture and hoped instead for a miracle. Mr. Wanglie said that only God can take life and that doctors should not play God.
By late 1990 repeated evaluaons by neurology and pulmonary medicine services at Hennepin County Medical Center confirmed the diagnosis of permanent unconsciousness (persistent vegetave state) and permanent respirator dependency because of chronic lung disease.
The hospital staff concurred that they had erred inially on the side of connuing treatment in order to provide me for the family to come to see the fulity of the treatment being offered Mrs. Wanglie; but the months passed and several conferences with the family proved to widen the ri between the medical judgment that the use of the respirator could not serve the paent’s interests and the determinaon of the Wanglie family to do nothing which would shorten Mrs. Wanglie’s life.
4.) Aboron because of Down’s Syndrome?
Case Overview: this should be taken to be more about the general ethical status of seeking an aboron specifically because one does not want to give birth to a child with Down’s Syndrome. As you likely know, this has been a significant issue in Ohio of late. Here is a relevant overview piece from the New York Times: hps://www.nymes.com/2007/05/13/weekinreview/13harm.html
Health Care and Jusce
1.) How should we raon vaccines?
Case Overview: Alison is a 19-year-old university student with moderately severe asthma. She was hospitalized once when she was twelve and caught a bad cold, and she has had some serious aacks in the past few years. If Alison were to catch the flu, it would likely cause an even more severe inflammaon of the lungs than a cold, leading to even more severe asthma aacks 1. Alison would be unable to breathe and her fast-acng inhaler might not be enough to clear her airways. Geng a flu vaccine is Alison’s best defense against geng the flu in the first place; it can cut her risk of geng the flu by up to 90 percent. When she was a child, her mother always took her to get her flu vaccine, and since she has been away at school she has been careful to get her own yearly vaccinaon. Unfortunately, this year there is a shortage, making it difficult to obtain the seasonal flu vaccine. Influenza vaccines are not considered very profitable to make, because they are expensive and any extra has to be thrown away at the end of the flu season, since a new vaccine must be produced every year. Consequently, not many companies produce the flu vaccine. Given that no single person or agency is in charge of ensuring that the United States has an adequate supply of influenza vaccines, it is not surprising that shortages do occur. This year, one of the companies, in charge of producing nearly half of the United States’ supply, had a bacterial contaminaon that forced them to shut down all vaccine producon.
Alison is very afraid of catching the flu. Her worst asthma aacks have been when she had a cold, and she is terrified of not being able to breathe. Alison wants to be sure to sll get her yearly flu vaccine, but there is currently no system in place to ensure that at-risk populaons receive the limited supply of vaccines available. It is enrely dependent on each clinic to try to raon their limited supply. To do this, some clinics aempt to use medical necessity criteria, which are challenging to define; Medicare defines medical necessity as “services or supplies that are needed for the diagnosis or treatment of your medical condion and meet accepted standards of medical pracce.” This is a subjecve standard, and is frequently assessed by an insurance company that never sees the paent, to determine if payment will be issued. Alternavely, many clinics avoid the issue by using a loery. The most common method of distribuon, however, is a “first-come first-served” basis, with some consideraon of medical necessity requirements.
In Santa Clara county in the 2009 H1N1 vaccine distribuon, the inial shipment to arrive was a nasal form of the vaccine, so it was limited to healthy children 2 years and older, especially those younger than 10 years who are recommended to receive two doses; and healthy household contacts (2 -49 years) of infants younger than 6 months 2. The next shipments of the injecon vaccine were then directed towards high risk groups such as pregnant women, household contacts and caregivers for children younger than 6 months of age, health care professionals, all people from 6 months of age to 24 years old (due to their parcular vulnerability to H1N1), and people aged 25 to 64 who have medical condions such as asthma that put them at a higher risk of complicaons from the flu.
To ensure that is she is among the lucky few who receive a vaccinaon this year, Alison gets up at 4:00 in the morning on a Friday and drives to the nearest clinic, which opens at 6:00 a.m. This clinic is the only clinic within 50 miles of Alison’s home to have received any vaccine supply, so everyone from the surrounding area is also coming here for their supply. Arriving shortly aer 4:30 a.m., she is number 62 in line for the vaccine. If she does not make it to the front of the line before all the shots are gone, she will not receive a vaccine. If she makes it to the front, but is determined not to be “enough” at-risk because she is not a senior, she will not receive a vaccine. Seniors are especially at risk for contracng pneumonia or bronchis given their generally lowered levels of acvity and weaker immune systems.
Alison finds herself in line behind a sixty-three year old man who doesn’t have any money to pay for the vaccine, but is not yet eligible for Medicare. Seniors are generally considered one of the high-priority groups for geng the flu vaccine, because they tend to have weaker immune systems and therefore develop more complicaons that are frequently fatal. He tells Alison that he is nervous that he will be turned away because he cannot pay, even though he is very close in age to the at-risk populaon. He also menons his daughter who wanted to bring her two young children to try and get the vaccine, but she works at a nearby canning factory and couldn’t get the me off to bring them to the clinic. Up at the front of the line there is some commoon over a young man being turned away because he is not considered at-risk. He can be heard shoung, “I’ll pay anything, just give me the vaccine!”
2.) Are religious exempons for contracepve treatments jusfiable?
Case Overview: On July 6, 2002, a University of Wisconsin-Stout student, went to the K-Mart in Menomonie, Wisconsin, to fill her prescripon for oral contracepves, birth control pills. The only pharmacist on duty, Neil Noesen, asked if she intended to use the prescripon for contracepon. When she replied in the affirmave, Noesen, a Roman Catholic, refused to fill the prescripon, explaining that to do so would be against his religious beliefs. She thought that he was kidding.
But Noesen was very serious. As a devout Catholic, he had concluded that he could not dispense contracepves. He also refused to transfer the prescripon or tell her how or where she could get the prescripon filled, all of which, he explained later, would, in his view, constute parcipang in wrongful behavior. Significantly, prior to employment at K-Mart, Noesen had informed the district manager that he would not dispense contracepves; however, he did not menon that he would refuse to refer or to transfer prescripons.
The queson for this case is whether a religious or conscienous exempon should be offered in cases like this one. Exempons of this kind offer legal protecon for persons who would otherwise be violang a general mandate. Another famous issue of this kind arose in the legal bale Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, wherein Hobby Lobby sought an exempon so they would not have to pay penales for refusing to cover four methods of birth control.
3.) Do paents have a right to alternave medicine (here acupuncture)?
Case Overview: Mr. Chen, a 40 year-old paent originally from China, has had lumbar problems for one year. The condion includes dull pain in his right leg and the inability to sit sll for long periods. X-ray examinaon reveals a prolapsed lumbar disc. He has been treated with convenonal pain medicaon with minimal effect.
His physician, Dr. Robert Olson, recommends back surgery, but Mr. Chen is reluctant to take this opon. Instead, he asks the doctor to refer him to an acupuncturist because his insurance coverage requires physician’s approval for “alternave” therapy. He menons to the physician that he has tried acupuncture before, and it has helped him.
But Dr. Olson is skepcal about any kind of alternave therapy. This derives partly from his belief that allopathic medicine, the approach taught in Western medical schools, is the most efficacious because it has been scienfically proven through clinical trials. He has also had extensive posive experience with surgical treatment for Mr. Chen’s condion. In his view, other forms of medicine are at best placebos, and he does not see it as his duty to recommend them. He refuses to order the acupuncture.
Did the physician act ethically?
This case illustrates a common scenario in doctors’ offices. Many paents seek alternave therapies because convenonal medicine has not brought them sasfacon. Must their physicians make these referrals?
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